A massive cyberattack was in the news again last week. This latest ransomware – dubbed “Petya” – crippled consumer product companies, transportation companies, law firms, and many other types of businesses worldwide. It is the second major ransomware attack in two months.

It appears that the Petya malware was delivered in a Microsoft Word document attached to an email. When the recipients opened the document, the malware encrypted their entire hard drive. It then looks for other unprotected computers in the same network and infects them.

This problem isn’t going away on its own. Companies need to be proactive. They need to train their employees with computer access to understand the risks, how to identify potential malware, what to do if they see it, and what to do if their computers becomes infected.

With the minimum wage increasing in cities across the state, I have been getting numerous calls and e-mails about those increases. I blogged about the announcement of the LA Hotel Ordinance increase already, but there’s more.

In an effort to get everything in one place, I’ve compiled links to all the new minimum wage increases that take effect July 1, 2017. There are many more local ordinances that have January increases but we can worry about those in a few months!

Have you ever felt powerless in your job? Felt that there was no way you could have impact on the corporate environment?

Well, recent events have shown how the catalyst theory is alive and well in corporate America.

Take Uber for example. A mere four months ago, a lone female engineer who had left the company after feeling mistreated wrote a blog post. Within days, that post went viral, caused Uber’s CEO and Board to take notice, and sparked a chain of events that was fascinating to watch (and blog about).

In fact, there are many other examples in the press about the catalyst theory at work, involving major television celebrities and executives. Powerful people, who once seemed untouchable despite all types of bad behavior (that was widely known yet unaddressed) eventually fall or are forced out. At times, karma really does catch up with people and justice can prevail.

So, if you are feeling powerless at your company, and think change can’t happen, well, think again. Just read the headlines, because one person (and in this case one brave woman), can really make a difference.

It took three months, but the long-awaited report about Uber’s culture from former Attorney General Eric Holder and his law firm was published this week. You can read the 13-page report with its 47 recommendations here. Uber’s Board of Directors voted unanimously to adopt all of the recommendations.

CEO, Travis Kalanick, will have a reduced leadership role. Parts of his job will be given to a new Chief Operating Officer charged with implementing the Board’s recommendations. There will also be more Board oversight of management, and steps to create a more independent Board that can actually hold management accountable (including financially).

In addition, it was also reported that the CEO is taking an immediate and indefinite leave of absence. It has been a rough year for Kalanick, whose mother recently died in a boating accident where his father was also seriously injured.

In his statement to Uber employees he writes: “The ultimate responsibility, for where we’ve gotten and how we’ve gotten here rests on my shoulders. For Uber 2.0 to succeed there is nothing more important than dedicating my time to building out the leadership team. But if we are going to work on Uber 2.0, I also need to work on Travis 2.0 to become the leader that this company needs and that you deserve.”

The report also reads like a help-wanted advertisement to consultants of all types as it requires:

Mandatory Leadership Training for Key Senior Management and Executive Team Members

Mandatory Human Resources Training

Mandatory Manager Training

Interview Training

Uber is also in the market for several senior executives including a new Chief Operating Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Senior Vice President of Engineering, and General Counsel after many high profile departures.

There are also recommended changes to the Human Resources Department and complaint process, which seem long overdue. As you know from prior blog posts, the way Human Resources reportedly handled the harassment issues raised by female engineers was a lesson in how not to investigate a complaint.

Steps will also be taken to limit the party atmosphere (less alcohol and controlled substances at work) and to prohibit romantic or intimate relationships between individuals in a reporting relationship. Hard to imagine that these protections were not already in place for a business with over 12,000 employees.

Probably the most entertaining recommendations were a revamp of the company’s core values to eliminate those that have been used to justify poor behavior, such as:

Let Builders Build

Always be Hustlin’

Meritocracy and Toe-Stepping

Principled Confrontation

Oh, and my personal favorite, the War Rooms will now be designated Peace Rooms.

Some are skeptical that Uber can change. Whether it can depends on whether Kalanick and other senior managers can set aside the aggressive culture to walk-the-walk, and not just talk-the-new- peaceful-inclusive-talk.

After a flurry of activity in February, the news has been relatively quiet at Uber until this week. We knew that reports of harassment by lady engineers triggered a massive investigation, and at the time, news reports indicated a formal report was due by the end of April. But that day came and went. Now, the wait is over, and Uber is in the news again. Here is the latest:

According to a report from Bloomberg, at least 20 Uber executives have been fired as part of the harassment probe, and more are being disciplined, after a law firm investigated a stunning 215 claimsof sexual harassment. According to reporting, of the 215 claims, 57 remain under investigation, 31 employees received counseling or training, and 7 received written warnings.

The New York Times also reported that Uber’s President of Asia Operations, and a longtime confidant of CEO Travis Kalanick, was fired after “reporters inquired about his actions to obtain the medical records of a woman who said she was raped by a driver” in India.

Meanwhile another law firm is also conducting an investigation led by former US Attorney General Eric Holder into claims made by Susan Fowler and other female engineers in February. That investigation apparently is still ongoing.

In addition other senior executives are resigning for various reasons, including Uber’s Vice President of Product and Growth who reportedly resigned once an affair with an employee was revealed, as well as a female Global Policy and Communications Chief who resigned amid reported clashes with the CEO.

Yes harassment issues still reign in California, and top executives can lose their jobs because of it. Even people who once seemed untouchable can fall from grace.

I was recently invited to contribute a chapter on employment law to the 2017 Israel Desk International Legal Guide. As more and more Israeli companies bring their operations to the U.S., they learn firsthand the intricacies of our employment laws. The chapter outlines six trends that I suggested that they pay attention to. They include wage and hour laws, equal pay, accommodating disabled workers, whistleblower claims, local regulations, and trade secrets.

On the topic of trade secrets, I had the opportunity to give a presentation in Tel Aviv last month on Protecting Your Trade Secrets in Silicon Valley and Beyond to members of IATI (Israel Advanced Technology Industries – an industry group for high-tech and life science companies). You can read my chapter on legal trends and see a copy of my presentation on trade secrets.

Fox Rothschild LLP’s Israel Practice Group is adept at helping companies based in Israel with their U.S. legal needs.

Its almost July 1st and that means increased minimum wages in the City of Los Angeles as well as under the Citywide Hotel Worker Minimum Wage Ordinance. Hotel workers covered under the Ordinance will see their hourly rate jump from $15.37 per hour to $15.66 per hour, as announced this morning. Don’t shoot the messenger!

Remember, there are still ways for hotels to trim labor costs, as discussed here.

It’s not enough that a trade secret isn’t generally known to those who can gain value from it. To qualify for protection in California and the other jurisdictions that use the Uniform Trade Secrets Act definition (and under the Federal Defend Trade Secrets Act), a trade secret must be the subject of reasonable measures to maintain its secrecy.

4. Train new employees to recognize what information is protected and how to handle it.

5. Periodically retrain existing employees.

6. Limit who has access to confidential information.

7. Mark documents and files to identify the level of protection they’re to receive.

8. Implement an information tracking system.

9. Dispose of information properly.

10. Regulate information that must leave the company.

11. Encourage employees to report suspected misappropriation.

12. Lock areas that contain confidential information.

13. Place warning signs in areas that contain confidential information.

14. Install security cameras.

15. Monitor visitors to your company.

16. Provide departing employees with copies of signed agreements and review key provisions.

17. Confirm that departing employees have returned all company information and equipment.

18. Terminate departing employees’ access to company systems and facilities.

19. Ask departing employees about future employment plans.

20. If the departing employee is going to a competitor or is evasive regarding his future plans, consider whether further action is necessary, such as requiring him to leave sooner, reviewing what systems he has accessed, sending a letter to the employee, and sending a letter to the prospective employer.

21. Immediately investigate suspected misappropriation.

22. Conduct a trade secret audit to determine if information is being properly protected.

Again, what is reasonable in one situation won’t make sense in others. The steps Google takes to protect its search algorithm will be very different from the steps that place by your office uses to protect its tomato soup recipe. I think the secret ingredient is basil, but that’s beside the point. The point here is that companies need to take those steps that are reasonable to safeguard their information. Because if they don’t, the information won’t qualify for protection.

We’ve discussed before how phishing scams target employers. A new scam focuses on defendants who have settled class-action claims. The scammers send wire transfer instructions that appear to come from reputable class-action claims administrators. If the defendant wires the funds though, it eventually discovers that it is the victim of a spear phishing attack and that the account it wired the funds do is fraudulent. It is unlikely to ever see that money again, but still owes the money it agreed to provide to the class-action plaintiffs and their attorneys.

We heard this cautionary tale from a LA Superior Court judge who wanted to get the word out about this new scam. Some poor company, which the judge understandably didn’t name, was out $500,000. This could obviously happen in any case, but is a bigger risk in cases where the settlement details and timeline for payment are readily available.

California employers are required to provide employees with several documents upon hire. But not all CA employers do. I was working with a retail boutique chain last week and when I provided them the list of required onboarding documents, the manager said she has been in retail for 20 years and had never seen the documents! In honor of the newly redesigned DFEH sexual harassment pamphlet, I thought I would provide a refresher (or in some cases, a first look) at documents that should be given to new hires when they begin employment with a company:

About Our Firm

Fox Rothschild LLP is a national law firm with 800 attorneys practicing in 22 offices coast to coast. We’ve been serving clients for more than a century, and we’ve been climbing the ranks of the nation’s largest firms for many years, according to both The Am Law 100 and The National Law Journal.Read More...